Apple Powerbook G5 mit 15" Display, 1,67 GHz absolutes Spitzenmodell, ideale MorphOS-Maschine



Topgeraet mit Topdesign




Ich biete hier mein Apple Powerbook G4 an. Ein absoluter Designklassiker, der zudem noch absolut funktionell ist. Das Arbeiten mit dem Powerbook macht einfach Spass. Eines der Meisterwerke, die Apple zurueck an die Spitze der Technik brachten. Es handelt sich hierbei um das Topmodell der PPC-Aera. Ein schnelleres Powerbook gibt es nicht.

Das Geraet eigent sich nicht nur fuer das OS X von Apple, sondern ist insbesondere das derzeit schnellste Geraet, auf dem MorphOS laeuft (siehe auch Infos dazu weiter unten). MorphOS (MOS) ist einer der Nachfolger des legendaeren Amiga von Commodore (CBM) und ist weitestgehend kompatibel zu diesem. Als mobiles Geraet fuer Entwickler oder Arbeitsgeraet einfach perfekt.

Ausstattung:

PPC G4 mit 1,67 GHz
15" Display
80 GB Festplatte
1 GB RAM


Das Geraet ist gebraucht, aber in recht gutem Zustand. Der Akku sollte getauscht werden. Das Netzteil ist natuerlich mit dabei.



For international bidders: you are bidding on a tested and fully functional Powerbook G4. The ultimate machine for MorphOS.


Einige Infos zu MorphOS:
MorphOS ist ein Mikrokernel-Betriebssystem für die PowerPC-Architektur der Pegasos-Rechnerfamilie, dem Efika-Board von Genesi sowie für den Apple Mac mini, den EMac und Power Mac.
Es ist per 68k-Emulation binärkompatibel zu Software, die für AmigaOS geschrieben wurde. Hierbei werden sehr gute Leistungswerte erreicht, die sich auch im Vergleich mit konventionellen Emulatoren wie WinUAE sehen lassen können.
Im Vergleich mit anderen Betriebssystemen bemerkt man deutlich die vom früheren AmigaOS gewohnte schnelle Reaktionszeit auf Benutzereingaben. Programme werden in der Regel sofort und ohne spürbare Verzögerung gestartet.

Geschichte
MorphOS im Verhältnis zu anderen Systemen
Die Geschichte des MorphOS reicht zurück bis in das Jahr 1995/96, als der Hauptentwickler Ralph Schmidt (damals noch bei phase5), mit den Arbeiten an der Software-Lösung für powerUP begann. Teilweise sind noch heute Ähnlichkeiten erkennbar, so dass man guten Gewissens MorphOS als den Nachfolger der powerUP-Software (ppc.library) bzw. als die eigentlich vorgesehene vollwertige Software-Lösung für die powerUP-Karten ansehen kann. Erste Versionen von MorphOS waren lange Zeit nur ausgewählten powerUP-Entwicklern als Vollversion zugänglich – sonst als zeitlimitierte Demo-Version. Inzwischen sind die aktuellen Versionen auch für Endanwender verfügbar.
Das MorphOS-Projekt an sich wurde 1999 begonnen. Danach folgten einige Software-Versionen bis zum Stand v1.4. Da Genesi die Entwickler von MorphOS seit Juli 2003 angeblich aus Mangel an Ressourcen nicht mehr bezahlt hatte[1], gab es daraufhin einige teils öffentliche Querelen unter den Entwicklern. Laut Genesi wurden später einige der betroffenen Entwickler bezahlt, und am 1. Mai 2005 wurde die Version v1.4.5 freigegeben.
Zwischenzeitlich gab es im Laufe des Jahres 2006 einige Updates für die powerUP-Version.
Am 30. Juni 2008 folgte die Version 2.0, die nun auch auf dem Efika-Board von Genesi lauffähig ist. Nach zwei größeren Aktualisierungen folgte am 6. August 2009 Version 2.3. Am 12. Oktober 2009 erschien die Version 2.4, erstmals mit Unterstützung für den Mac mini G4. Mit Version 2.4 folgte die Unterstützung für den eMac. In Version 2.6 vom 10. Oktober 2010, kam erstmals die Unterstützung für den Power Mac hinzu. Am 2. Dezember 2010 wurde die Version 2.7 veröffentlicht. Hauptsächlich ist die Version 2.7 ein Bugfix-Release, z. T. sind auch Neuerungen enthalten, wie die experimentelle Unterstützung von PowerPC-7448-Prozessoren.
Die Veröffentlichung von Version 3.0 erfolgte am 8. Juni 2012 und brachte als wichtigste Neuerung die Unterstützung der PowerBook-Modelle 5,6 bis 5,9. Des Weiteren befindet sich nun ein Brennprogramm für CDs und DVDs, ein FTP/SFTP-Client, eine aktualisierte Version des Odyssey Webbrowsers, neue Reggae-Klassen und der auf Reggae basierende Audioplayer Jukebox im Lieferumfang.

Besonderheiten
Schichtenmodell
MorphOS zeichnet sich u. a. durch folgende Merkmale aus:
* moderne Mikrokernel-Architektur (Quark-Kernel)
* erfüllt weiche Echtzeitanforderungen
* schnelle Reaktionszeiten (GUI, Dateisystem)
* einfache Bedienung und Konfiguration durch den Ambient-Desktop
* binärkompatibel zu AmigaOS 3.1 68k-Software (per Emulation) und eigenen PowerPC-Programmen
* sehr ressourcenschonend und effizient programmiert
* präemptives Multitasking
* eigenes SDK mit GCC 2.95.x und 4.4.x Compilerumgebung und hoher POSIX-Kompatibilität (über ixemul.library)


Some detailed Infos on MorphOS:
MorphOS is an Amiga-compatible computer operating system. It is a mixed proprietary and open source OS produced for the Pegasos PowerPC processor based computer, PowerUP accelerator equipped Amiga computers, and a series of Freescale development boards that use the Genesi firmware, including the EFIKA and mobileGT. Since MorphOS 2.4, Apple's Mac Mini G4 is supported as well, and with the release of MorphOS 2.5 and MorphOS 2.6 the eMac and PowerMac G4 models are respectively supported. The core, based on the Quark microkernel, is proprietary, although several libraries and other parts are open source, such as Ambient desktop.

Characteristics and versions
Developed for PowerPC processors from Freescale and IBM while supporting the original AmigaOS MC680x0 applications via proprietary task-based emulation, and most AmigaOS/PPC applications via API wrappers. It is API compatible with AmigaOS 3.1 and has a GUI based on MUI.
Besides the Pegasos version of MorphOS, there is a version for Amiga computers equipped with PowerUP accelerator cards produced by Phase5. This version is free, although it does slow down after each two hour session if it has not been registered. Registration is free. PowerUP MorphOS was most recently updated on 23 February 2006; however, it does not exceed the feature set or advancement of the Pegasos release.
A version of MorphOS for the EFIKA, a very small mainboard based on the ultra-low wattage MPC5200B processor from Freescale, has been shown at exhibitions and user-gatherings in Germany.[4] Current (since 2.0) release of MorphOS supports the EFIKA.

Components
ABox
ABox is an emulation sandbox featuring a PPC native AmigaOS API clone that is binary compatible with both 68k Amiga applications and both PowerUP and WarpOS formats of Amiga PPC executables. ABox is based in part on AROS Research Operating System. ABox includes Trance JIT code translator for 68k native Amiga applications.

Other
* AHI — audio interface: 6.7
* Ambient desktop — the default MorphOS desktop, inspired by Workbench and Directory Opus 1.43
* CyberGraphX — graphics interface originally developed for Amiga computers: 5.1
* Magic User Interface—primary GUI toolkit: 4.0
* Poseidon (USB stack)— the Amiga USB stack developed by Chris Hodges
* TurboPrint— the printing system
* TinyGL—OpenGL implementation and Warp3D compatibility is featured via RAVE low-level API: V 51
* Quark—manages the low level systems

MorphOS software
MorphOS can run any system friendly Amiga software written for 68k processors. It also provides compatibility layer for PowerUP and WarpUP software written for PowerUP accelerator cards. The largest repository is Aminet with over 75000 packages online with packages from all Amiga flavours including music, sound and artwork. MorphOS only software repositories are hosted at MorphOS software and MorphOS files.

Bundled applications
Main article: List of MorphOS bundled applications

MorphOS is delivered with a number of desktop applications in the form of pre-installed software.

Supported hardware
* max. 1.5 GB RAM

Amiga
* Amiga 1200 with Blizzard PPC accelerator card
* Amiga 3000 with CyberStorm PPC accelerator card
* Amiga 4000 with CyberStormPPC accelerator card
Apple
* Mac mini G4
* eMac
* Power Mac G4
* PowerBook G4

Genesi/bPlan GmbH
* EFIKA
* Pegasos I G3
* Pegasos II G3/G4

History
Amiga family development tree.
The project started in 1999, based on the Quark microkernel. The earliest versions of MorphOS ran only via PPC accelerator cards on the Amiga computers, and required portions of AmigaOS to fully function. A collaborative effort between the companies bPlan (of which the lead MorphOS developer is a partner) and Thendic-France in 2002 resulted in the first regular, non-prototype production of bPlan-engineered Pegasos computers capable of running MorphOS or Linux. A busy promotional year followed in 2003, with appearances at conventions and exhibitions in several places around the world, including CES in Las Vegas. Thendic-France had financial problems and folded; however, the collaboration continued under the new banner of "Genesi".
After some bitter disagreements within the MorphOS development team in 2003 and 2004 culminating with accusations by a MorphOS developer that he and others had not been paid, the Ambient desktop interface was released under GPL and is now actively developed by the Ambient development team. Subject to GPL rules, Ambient continues to be included in the commercial MorphOS product. An alternative MorphOS desktop system is Scalos.
On April 1, 2008 the MorphOS team announced that MorphOS 2.0 would be released within Q2/2008. This promise was only kept by a few seconds, with the release of MorphOS 2.0 occurring on June 30, 2008 23:59 CET. MorphOS 2 is commercially available at a price of 150 EUR per machine (111,11 EUR as a special promotion within the first two weeks of its release). A fully functional demo of MorphOS is available, but without a keyfile, its speed is decreased significantly after 30 minutes of use.

Release history of 2.x/3.x series
Version Release Date Information Notes
<
Version Release Date Information Notes
2.0 June 30, 2008 MorphOS 2.0 release notes Added support for Efika 5200B platform
2.1 September 6, 2008 MorphOS 2.1 release notes
2.2 December 20, 2008 MorphOS 2.2 release notes
2.3 August 6, 2009 MorphOS 2.3 release notes
2.4 October 12, 2009 MorphOS 2.4 release notes Added support for Mac mini G4
2.5 June 4, 2010 MorphOS 2.5 release notes Added support for eMac G4
2.6 October 10, 2010 MorphOS 2.6 release notes Added support for Power Mac G4
2.7 December 2, 2010 MorphOS 2.7 release notes
3.0 June 8, 2012 MorphOS 3.0 release notes Added support for PowerBook G4
3.1 July 8, 2012 MorphOS 3.1 release notes
3.2 May 27, 2013 MorphOS 3.2 release notes Added support for further PowerBook G4 models, iBook G4 and Power Mac G5
3.3 September 18, 2013 MorphOS 3.3 release notes On September 18, 2013 MorphOS 3.3 was released. MorphOS 3.3 is a bug fix release. In particular this release fixes support for some iBook G4 models.
3.4 December 14, 2013 MorphOS 3.4 release notes MorphOS 3.4 improves R300 3D and G5 video playback performance. It also adds support for non-native display resolutions on various PowerBook models.5

MorphOS 2 includes a native TCP/IP stack ("Netstack") and a web browser, Sputnik or Origyn Web Browser.[6] Sputnik was begun under a user community bounty system [7] that also resulted in MOSNet, a free, separate TCP/IP stack for MorphOS 1 users. Sputnik is a port of the KHTML rendering engine, which WebKit is also based on. Sputnik is no longer developed and was removed from later MorphOS 2 releases. All TCP/IP stacks

Version 2.0
MorphOS 2.0 was released on June 30, 2008. The new version included (along other improvements) the previously missing native TCP/IP stack, an updated Sputnik release, AltiVec support, alpha compositing 3D layers for the graphical user interface, new USB components (including USB 2.0 support), new screenblankers, and Reggae, a new, modular, streaming multimedia framework. MorphOS 2.0 also included support for the EFIKA, Pegasos I and Pegasos II machines.

Version 2.1
On September 5, 2008 MorphOS 2.1 was released, fixing numerous bugs and adding support for the EFIKA's audio.

Version 2.2
On December 20, 2008 MorphOS 2.2 was released, fixing numerous bugs, adding a TrueCrypt-compatible disk encryption suite and several small items.

Version 2.3
On August 6, 2009 MorphOS 2.3 was released, fixing numerous bugs, adding Origyn Web Browser as the default browser, read only HFS+ filesystem support and several small items.

Version 2.4
On October 12, 2009 MorphOS 2.4 was released, adding support for Mac Mini G4 platform, as well as fixing various bugs and adding new features. Write support for Mac HFS disks were added and new charsets.library was included to provide better multilingual application support.

Version 2.5
On June 4, 2010 MorphOS 2.5 was released, adding support for eMac G4 platforms and drivers for SiI3x1x based 2-port Serial ATA PCI cards.

Version 2.6
On October 10, 2010 MorphOS 2.6 was released, adding support for Power Mac G4 platforms and 2D drivers for Rage 128 Pro graphics cards., Released at precisely 10.10.10 10:10

Version 2.7
On December 2, 2010 MorphOS 2.7 was released, improving support for Power Mac G4 platforms and fixing various bugs.

Version 3.0
On June 8, 2012 MorphOS 3.0 was released, introducing support for PowerBook G4, including several performance improvements and new features and fixing various bugs.

Version 3.1
On July 8, 2012 MorphOS 3.1 was released. MorphOS 3.1 is a bug fix release.

Version 3.2
On May 27, 2013 MorphOS 3.2 was released, introducing support for further PowerBook G4 models, all iBook G4 models and Power Mac G5 model A1047. Radeon 3D drivers were updated to support R300 based cards. Wireless networking is now supported via Atheros chipset. MorphOS TCP/IP stack ("NetStack") received a major overhaul, improving networking performance.

Version 3.3
On September 18, 2013 MorphOS 3.3 was released. MorphOS 3.3 is a bug fix release. In particular this release fixes support for some iBook G4 models.

Version 3.4
On December 14, 2013 MorphOS 3.4 was released. MorphOS 3.4 improves R300 3D and G5 video playback performance. It also adds support for non-native display resolutions on various PowerBook models.

Quelle: Wikipedia



Infos zum Powerbook G4:
The PowerBook G4 is a series of notebook computers that were manufactured, marketed, and sold by Apple, Inc. (then Apple Computer, Inc) between 2001 and 2006 as part of its PowerBook line. It uses the PowerPC G4 processor, initially produced by Motorola and later by Freescale, after Motorola spun off its semiconductor business under that name in 2004. The PowerBook G4 had two different designs: one enclosed in a titanium body with a translucent black keyboard and a 15" screen; and another in an aluminum body with an aluminum-colored keyboard, in 12", 15", and 17" sizes.
Between 2001 and 2003, Apple produced the Titanium PowerBook G4; between 2003 and 2006, the Aluminum models were produced. Both models were hailed for their modern design, long battery life, and processing power. When the Aluminum PowerBook G4s were first released in January 2003, however, only 12 and 17-inch models were available. The 15-inch retained the titanium body until September 2003 when a new aluminum 15-inch PowerBook was released. In addition to the change from titanium to aluminum, the new 15-inch model featured a FireWire 800 port, which had been included with the 17-inch model since its debut nine months earlier.
The PowerBook G4 line was the last generation of the PowerBook series, and was succeeded by the Intel-powered MacBook Pro line in the first half of 2006.

Titanium PowerBook G4
PowerBook G4 (Titanium)
Titanium PowerBook G4 (nicknamed TiBook)
Developer Apple Computer inc.
Type Laptop
Release date 9 January 2001
Discontinued 16 September 2003
CPU PowerPC G4, 400MHz–1GHz

The first generations of the PowerBook G4 were announced at Steve Jobs' keynote at MacWorld Expo in January 2001. They featured a PowerPC G4 processor running at either 400 or 500 MHz. They were just 1 inch (25 mm) deep, 0.7 inches (18 mm) shallower than their predecessor, the PowerBook G3. They were among the first laptops to use a widescreen aspect ratio.The PowerBook G4 Titanium also featured a front-mounted slot-loading optical drive.[1] The notebook was given the nickname "TiBook", a blend of the words titanium, the material used for the computer's case, and the brand name PowerBook, the name of the computer.

Industrial design
The initial design of the PowerBook G4s was developed by Apple hardware designers Jory Bell, Nick Merz, and Danny Delulis.[3] The ODM Quanta also helped in the design.[citation needed] The new machine was a sharp departure from the black plastic, curvilinear PowerBook G3 models that preceded it. The orientation of the Apple logo on the computer's lid was switched so it would 'read' correctly to onlookers when the computer was in use. PowerBook G3 and prior models presented it right side up to the computer's owner when the lid was closed. Apple's industrial design team, headed by British designer Jonathan Ive, converged around a minimalist aesthetic—the Titanium G4's design language laid the groundwork for the Aluminum PowerBook G4, the MacBook Pro, the Power Mac G5, the flat-screen iMac, the Xserve, and the Mac mini.

Models
Component PowerBook G4
Model Jan 7, 2001 (Mercury) [4][5] Oct 16, 2001 (Onyx) April 29, 2002 (Ivory) Nov 6, 2002 (Antimony)
Display
(widescreen)
15.2" TFT matte LCD display, 1152×768 15.2" TFT matte LCD display, 1280×854
Processor 400 MHz or 500 MHz PowerPC G4 with 1 MB backside L2 cache 550 MHz or 667 MHz PowerPC G4 with 256 KB backside L2 cache 667 MHz or 800 MHz PowerPC G4 with 256 KB backside L2 cache and 1 MB backside L3 cache 867 MHz or 1 GHz PowerPC G4 with 256 KB backside L2 cache and 1 MB backside L3 cache
Graphics ATI Rage 128 with 8 MB of SDRAM, AGP 2× ATI Radeon with 16 MB of SDRAM, AGP 4× ATI Radeon 7500 with 32 MB of DDR SDRAM ATI Radeon 9000 with 32 MB or 64 MB of DDR SDRAM
Hard drive1 10 GB or 20 GB Ultra ATA/66
Optional 30 GB
20 GB or 30 GB Ultra ATA/66
Optional 48 GB
30 GB or 40 GB Ultra ATA/66 at 4200-rpm
Optional 60 GB at 5400-rpm
40 GB or 60 GB Ultra ATA/66 at 4200-rpm
Memory 128 MB (two 64 MB) or 256 MB (two 128 MB) of PC100 SDRAM 128 MB (two 64 MB) or 256 MB (two 128 MB) of PC133 SDRAM 256 MB (two 128 MB) or 512 MB (two 256 MB) of PC133 SDRAM
AirPort Optional Optional or Integrated 802.11b
Internal Slot-Loading Drive3 2x DVD-ROM 2x DVD-ROM
Optional 24x CD-ROM read, 8x CD-R write, 8x CD-RW write
8x DVD read, 8x CD-R write, 24x CD-R read 8x DVD read, 8x CD-R write, 24x CD-R read or 1x DVD-R write, 6x DVD read, 8x CD-R write, 24x CD read
Connections 2 x USB 1.1
VGA DVI
1 x FireWire 400
1/8" audio output 1/8" audio output/input
10/100 Fast Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet
Maximum Operating System Mac OS X 10.4.11 "Tiger" and Mac OS 9.2.2 Mac OS X 10.5.8 "Leopard"

In 2003 Apple introduced a new line of PowerBook G4s with 12, 15, and 17-inch screens and aluminum cases (prompting the new moniker "AlBook"). The new notebooks not only brought a different design to the PowerBook G4 line but also laid down the foundation for Apple’s notebook design for the next five years, replaced initially in January 2008 by the MacBook Air and the subsequent MacBook and MacBook Pro redesigns in October. The 15" titanium model was still available until September 16, 2003, when the Aluminum model replaced it. Notably, the 12" model brought a welcome return to the Apple subnotebook configuration, conspicuously lacking in their product line since the discontinuation of the PowerBook 2400 in 1998. While the titanium PowerBook G4s were capable of running Mac OS 9 or Mac OS X operating systems, the aluminum PowerBook G4s could only boot in Mac OS X from startup. Both series of machines could run Mac OS 9 in Classic mode from within Mac OS X.

Industrial design
The aluminum PowerBook G4 was designed by Apple's Vice President of Industrial Design, Jonathan Ive, and used a radically different design from the preceding titanium models. The most obvious change was the use of aluminum, not titanium, to manufacture the body. The keyboard, which was originally black, was changed to match the color of the body. Additionally, the aluminum keyboard was backlit on the 17" model and on one of the 15" models. The design was considered superior to most other notebooks when it debuted in 2003, and consequently, it made the PowerBook G4 one of the most desirable notebooks on the market. The external design of Apple's professional laptops continued to remain similar to the aluminum Powerbook G4 until the Spotlight on Notebooks event on October 14, 2008.

Component PowerBook G4
Model Jan 7, 2003 (Rev A) Sept 16, 2003 (Rev B) April 19, 2004 (Rev C) Jan 31, 2005 (Rev D) Oct 19, 2005 (Rev E)
Order #s M8760LL/A, M8793LL/A M9007LL/A, M9008LL/A, M8980LL/A, M8981LL/A, M9110LL/A M9183LL/A, M9184LL/A, M9421LL/A, M9422LL/A, M9462LL/A M9690LL/A, M9691LL/A, M9676LL/A, M9677LL/A, M9689LL/A M9691LL/A, M9969LL/A, M9970LL/A
Display
(15" and 17" widescreen)
(all matte)
12.1", TFT LCD display, 1024×768
N/A 15.2", TFT LCD display, 1280×854 15.2", TFT LCD display, 1440×960
17", TFT LCD display, 1440×900 17", TFT LCD display, 1680×1050
Processor 867 MHz PowerPC G4 with 256KB of L2 backside cache or 1 GHz PowerPC G4 with 1 MB of L3 backside cache
867 MHz PowerPC G4 only on 12" model
1 GHz, 1.25 GHz, or 1.33 GHz PowerPC G4 with 512 KB of L2 backside cache 1.33 GHz or 1.5 GHz PowerPC G4 with 512 KB of L2 backside cache 1.5 GHz or 1.67 GHz PowerPC G4 with 512 KB of L2 backside cache
1.67 GHz PowerPC G4 only on 15" and 17" models
Graphics NVIDIA GeForce4 Go 420 with 32 MB of DDR SDRAM or NVIDIA GeForce4 Go 440 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM NVIDIA GeForce FX Go5200 with 32 MB of DDR SDRAM or ATI Radeon 9600 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM NVIDIA GeForce FX Go5200 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM or ATI Radeon 9700 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM
Optional ATI Radeon 9700 with 128 MB of DDR SDRAM
NVIDIA GeForce FX Go5200 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM or ATI Radeon 9700 with 64 MB or 128 MB of DDR SDRAM NVIDIA GeForce FX Go5200 with 64 MB of DDR SDRAM or ATI Radeon 9700 with 128 MB of DDR SDRAM
Hard drive1 40 GB or 60 GB Ultra ATA/100 at 4200-rpm 40 GB Ultra ATA/100 at 4200-rpm or 60 GB or 80 GB Ultra ATA/100 at 5400-rpm 60 GB, 80 GB, or 100 GB Ultra ATA/100 at 5400-rpm 80 GB, 100 GB or 120 GB Ultra ATA/100 at 5400-rpm
Memory 256 MB (two 128 MB) of 266 MHz PC-2100 DDR SO-DIMM SDRAM or 512 MB (two 256 MB) of 333 MHz PC-2700 DDR SO-DIMM SDRAM 256 MB (two 128 MB) of 266 MHz PC-2100 DDR SO-DIMM SDRAM or 256 MB (two 128 MB) or 512 MB (two 256 MB) of 333 MHz PC-2700 SO-DIMM DDR SDRAM 256 MB (two 128 MB) or 512 MB (two 256 MB) of 333 MHz PC-2700 DDR SO-DIMM SDRAM 512 MB (two 256 MB) of 333 MHz PC-2700 DDR SO-DIMM SDRAM 512 MB (two 256 MB) of 333 MHz PC-2700 DDR or 533 MHz PC2-4200 DDR2 SO-DIMM SDRAM (two SO-DIMM slots support up to 2GB)
AirPort Extreme Optional or Integrated 802.11b/g Integrated 802.11b/g
Internal Slot-Loading Combo drive[c] 8× DVD read, 24× CD-R, and 10× CD-RW recording
(12" model only)
8× DVD read, 24× CD-R, and 10× CD-RW recording
(12" and 15" models only)
N/A
Internal Slot-Loading SuperDrive3 2× DVD-R write, 6× DVD read, 8× CD-R write, 4× CD-RW write 2× DVD-R write, 8× DVD read, 16× CD-R write, 4× CD-RW write 4× DVD-R write, 8× DVD read, 16× CD-R write, 4× CD-RW write 8× DVD±R (Dual Layer) write, 4× DVD±RW write, 6× DVD± read, 24× CD-R write, 10× CD-RW write
Connections 2 USB 1.1 2 USB 2.0
Mini-VGA or DVI[disambiguation needed] Mini-DVI or DVI
1 FireWire 400 (plus 1 FireWire 800 on 15" and 17")
Bluetooth 1.1 Bluetooth 2.0
Maximum Operating System Mac OS X 10.5.8 "Leopard"
Quelle: Wikipedia

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